Debunking Divine Command Theory
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. What Is the Divine Command Theory?
2.1. Varieties of Divine Command Theory
2.2. Religious Belief as a Requirement for Morality
2.3. Divine Command Theory and Belief
- Moral norms are good or bad solely because they were issued by God.
- Moral norms stem from the nature of God.
- God is somehow involved in morality.
- Commands of God are coextensive with demands of morality.
- Belief in God is required for proper moral behavior.
3. Belief-Forming Processes That Produce DCT-Beliefs
3.1. Broad Supernatural Punishment
3.2. Big Gods Theory
3.3. Moral Dyad
3.4. Costly Signalling
4. Debunking?
4.1. Broad Supernatural Punishment
- Why people believe that gods care about morality.
- Why people believe that gods punish or reward people in accordance with their moral behavior.
4.2. Big Gods Theory
4.3. Moral Dyad
4.4. Costly Signaling
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | I exclusively focus on recent defenses of the divine command theory. The theory is of course much older. See for example: (Augustine 2005). |
2 | Well-known examples are the Christian and Jewish Ten Commandments and the Hindu Dharma. Religious conceptions of morality where moral rules stem from taboos issued by spirits or ancestors may also be regarded as examples of DCT. |
3 | Anscombe contrasts a law-based conception of morality (or deontological conception) with utilitarian and virtue-based conception of morality. Anscombe argues for the superiority of the latter (Anscombe 2020). |
4 | Tian is commonly regarded not as a material natural phenomenon but as a divine entity which is the proper object of worship by the Chinese. |
5 | Disavowal is common in defenses of the need of God’s existence for objective morality. See for example: (Craig and Wielenberg 2020). |
6 | See (Tamir et al. 2020) for more numbers broken down by country. |
7 | For an overview, see: (Austin 2006). |
8 | Defenders of most internalist epistemologies (cf. Madison 2010) would require that the subject knows that the BFP is distorting reality in order to lose justification. Discussion on the requirement for such meta-beliefs for justification are beyond the scope of this paper. |
9 | For a defense of justification by resorting to other reasons or other means of support, see: (McBrayer 2018). |
10 | See, for example: (Oviedo 2018). |
11 | The immediate causes for belief-formation, like reasoning or testimony, may rectify the epistemic shortcomings of attractors. If attractors are shown to be misleading, yet reasoning or testimony is solid, beliefs are not tainted. |
12 | For defenses of the theory, see: (D. Johnson 2016; Bering and Johnson 2005). |
13 | Some animal communities, like bees or ants rely even more heavily on cooperation for their survival and procreation. |
14 | It occurs that a human individual does all these tasks him- or herself. Such occasions are however, rare and solo individuals usually have a much shorter lifespan. |
15 | Some defenders add that gods need to have access to intentions and thoughts to have a beneficial effect on cooperation (Bering and Johnson 2005). |
16 | Some argue that belief in gods arose as a by-product, a trait without intrinsic adaptive value which evolved along with other adaptive traits (Davis 2017). |
17 | The theory is primarily defended by Kurt Gray (Gray and Wegner 2010). |
18 | For defenses, see: (Soler 2012; Sosis and Bressler 2003). |
19 | See: (Van Eyghen and Bennett 2022) for an extended discussion of the argument. |
20 | Wilkins and Griffiths conclude that such beliefs ought to be believed with ‘less confidence’. |
21 | The debate concerning justification by means of religious and revelatory experiences is vast with numerous arguments on both sides (see for example (Alston 1993; D. K. Johnson 2022). All this shows that additional arguments are needed to discard justification from experiences of this sort. |
22 | For examples, see: (Van Woudenberg and Rothuizen-van der Steen 2015; Plantinga 2011). |
23 | To avoid the mereological fallacy (Bennett and Hacker 2022), the terms ‘making a mistake’ and ‘concludes’ should be read functionally. The term ‘making a mistake’ means something like ‘producing false information’ and the term ‘conclude’ roughly ‘deriving new information’. |
24 | For a discussion, see: (Hallanger 2016). For a recent criticism, see: (Kittle 2022). |
25 | For a defense of the soul-building theodicy, see: (Hick 2010). |
26 | A well-known example is the case of agency detection. Various authors argued that humans are too quick to detect agency on vague or limited evidence because doing so was evolutionary beneficial. See: (Atkinson 2023) for an overview of various accounts. |
27 | I thank an anonymous reviewer for suggesting this point. |
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Van Eyghen, H. Debunking Divine Command Theory. Religions 2023, 14, 1252. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14101252
Van Eyghen H. Debunking Divine Command Theory. Religions. 2023; 14(10):1252. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14101252
Chicago/Turabian StyleVan Eyghen, Hans. 2023. "Debunking Divine Command Theory" Religions 14, no. 10: 1252. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14101252
APA StyleVan Eyghen, H. (2023). Debunking Divine Command Theory. Religions, 14(10), 1252. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14101252